Delabeling method

5685053
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Inventors

Deonarine, Victor
Doyle, Gerard Bernard

Application #

449690

Filed

May-24-1995

Published

Nov-11-1997

Current US Class

029/426.4
029/822
083/53
134/34
156/584

International Classes

B23P 019/02

Field of Search

29/426.1 29/426.3 29/426.4 29/235 29/DIG. 83/53 83/177 134/144 134/148 134/151 134/32 134/34 15/60 15/61 156/247 156/248 156/344 156/584

Assignee

Illinois Tool Works Inc. (Glenview, IL)

Examiners

Vo; Peter

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Watts, Hoffmann, Fisher & Heinke Co., L.P.A.

US Patent References

4717442   Apparatus for remo...
4834826   Method of an appa...
5217538   Apparatus and rel...
5317794   Method of delabelli...
5373618   Method of removin...
5433057   High speed sleever
5442851   Delabelling appar...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A method of removing labels utilizing an associated delabeling apparatus has a spaced pair of label removal stations for alternatively receiving inline objects from a supply conveyor. Each station includes a carrier carrying a set of spaced fluid jet cutters each at a cutting location for registration with a labeled object. An actuator is connected to the carriers for alternatively moving them from respective start to stop positions and return to traverse each cutter from a bottom to a top end of a registered label to cut it end to end. Each location has a fluid nozzle positioned to emit a stream of fluid against a label being removed and a friction finger element to assist in label removal.
 
Claims
We claim:

1. A method of removing tubular labels from a set of aligned bottles comprising:

a) aligning each of a set of fluid jet emitting cutters with a lower end of a label on an associated upright bottle;

b) cutting the labels by relatively moving each bottle and the associated cutter generally vertically while directing a differential fluid cutting jet of liquid against the label of the associated bottle along a transverse path from a lower to an upper end of the label to cut the label from its lower to its upper end thereby assuring a complete cut of the label from its lower to its top end; and,

c) removing the cut labels from the bottles.

2. The method of claim 1 wherein a set of label removal streams of fluid are directed against the labels and the bottles at locations substantially diametrically opposed from the paths relative to the bottles to assist in the label removal step.



Description
TECHNICAL FIELD

This invention relates to bottle delabelers, and more particularly, to a high-speed automatic delabeler especially suited for removing tubular plastic labels from bottles and a method of label removal.

CROSS-REFERENCES

U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/789257 filed Nov. 7, 1991 by Hershey Lerner et al entitled "High-Speed Sleever," now U. S. Pat. No. 5,483,783, issued Jan. 16, 1996(here the Labeler Patent).

U.S. Pat. No. 5,317,794 issued Jun. 7, 1994 entitled "Method of Delabeling"(here the Delabeler Patent).

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Plastic labels are enjoying increasing use for labeling beverage and other bottles. Many of these labels are of a wrap-around type, each of which is adhesively secured to its bottle. Plastic labels in the form of tubular sleeves, each of which is slid over the bottle are being used in increasing quantities.

Until recently, the major advantage of wrap-around labels has been their low-cost achieved by high-speed labeling machines that have had greater throughput than sleeving machines. With the advent of the machine of the Labeler Patent, wrap-around labels no longer enjoy economic advantage over tubular sleeves. Indeed, given that the glue accounts for approximately eight percent of their cost, wrap-around labels are now more expensive. This is especially true if one takes into account the fact that, if there is a labeling malfunction with a glue-on label, both bottle and label are typically thrown away while, with the sleeve labels, the label is removed and another label is applied to the bottle.
 
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